UNIVERSITY CREATES SPACE FOR NEW HOUSING WITH REDI-ROCK RETAINING WALLS

WORCESTER STATE UNIVERSITY USES GRAVITY AND REINFORCED RETAINING WALLS TO CREATE BUILDABLE SPACE ON UNIVERSITY CAMPUS

THE CHALLENGE

Worcester State University started as a teacher-training school in 1874, then transitioned to a liberal arts and sciences school in 1963. In 2010, it became recognized as a state university. As the university has grown, it has also acquired more and more students, creating a struggle to find space for additional housing.

"Worcester State University, along with the rest of Worcester, is nothing but hills," said Casey Scavone, of Redi-Rock Walls of New England, who supplied the blocks for this project. "It's fantastic for retaining walls."

THE SOLUTION

WSU chose Redi-Rock® retaining walls to expand the buildable area for a new student union and dining commons overlooking the sports fields.

Redi-Rock is a precast segmental retaining wall system known for building tall gravity walls, and even taller reinforced walls. These massive blocks weigh about one ton each and stack up like giant Lego blocks using an excavator.

The site included a moderate slope and global stability issues, so Eric Merluzzi, PE, had to incorporate geogrid reinforcement into the lower wall, but was able to optimize the design by using the gravity system for the top tier of the wall.

The project also incorporated many curving walls, which Merluzzi said were simple to achieve because of the tapered block shape. "There's no cutting, no trimming-the blocks fit nice and neat...it works well."

Aesthetics were also very important to the university. Thousands of students and visitors will view the wall each year, due to its close proximity to Coughlin Field, the main athletic field on campus.

"They wanted something that looked natural and something that would really stick out, so New England Ledgestone was a great fit," said Scavone.

THE INSTALLATION

"The biggest challenge here was the winter conditions," said Matt Guigli, of Ernest Guigli & Sons, Inc. "We had to use a series of ground heaters to keep the ground thawed out overnight, because ambient temperatures at night were dropping well below freezing, even during the day. As soon as that soil freezes behind the wall, it's no longer suitable for use, so we either had to remove any soil that was frozen, or keep it in a thawed state."

Even with those issues, the Redi-Rock blocks installed quickly. Using three pieces of machinery and an installation staff averaging 6-8 people daily, the walls were installed over a three-month period.

"Personally we would prefer to install a Redi-Rock wall due to the size of the block," Guigli said. "There's more machine work involved, they go quicker, and I think in a given day you can install more square footage as compared to a smaller, labor intensive block."

THE OUTCOME

The final block tally for this project was 1,200 blocks. The majority of the blocks were retaining blocks, though the wall was finished with freestanding blocks with textures on two and three sides, and with caps, to ensure that there was no unfinished concrete marring the appearance.

"This was a great project for us, in all areas, especially exposure," said Scavone. "With all the people that are going to pass this area over the years here at WSU, it's a fantastic project. The install was beautiful-everything came out perfect."